Emerg Infect DiseidEmerging Infectious Diseases1080-60401080-6059Centers for Disease Control92043012627601Research ArticleSeroepidemiologic studies of hantavirus infection among wild rodents in California.JayM.AscherM. S.ChomelB. B.MadonM.SeslineD.EngeB. A.HjelleB.KsiazekT. G.RollinP. E.KassP. H.ReillyK.California Department of Health Services, Sacramento, USA.Apr-Jun199732183190

A total of 4,626 mammals were serologically tested for antibodies to Sin Nombre virus. All nonrodent species were antibody negative. Among wild rodents, antibody prevalence was 8.5% in murids, 1.4% in heteromyids, and < 0.1% in sciurids. Of 1,921 Peromyscus maniculatus (deer mice), 226 (11.8%) were antibody positive, including one collected in 1975. The highest antibody prevalence (71.4% of 35) was found among P. maniculatus on Santa Cruz Island, off the southern California coast. Prevalence of antibodies among deer mice trapped near sites of human cases (26.8% of 164) was significantly higher than that of mice from other sites (odds ratio = 4.5; 95% confidence interval = 1.7, 11.6). Antibody prevalence increased with rising elevation (> 1,200 meters) and correlated with a spatial cluster of hantavirus pulmonary syndrome cases in the Sierra Nevada.